Partly Cloudy with a Chance of Death

All morning, before the tornado, it had rained. The day was dark and gloomy. The air was heavy. There was no wind. Then the drizzle increased. The heavens seemed to open, pouring down a flood. The day grew black…

—Article of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch describing the morning of March 20, 1925.

Significant character deaths tend to take place outdoors on a partly cloudy day. The dying character will look up at the sun just as it starts to be obscured by a cloud, optionally reaching out for it with one hand, and will die as the sun Anviliciously disappears into the clouds. Hell, it might even start raining at that very moment.

G Gundam uses the rising sun variant to great dramatic effect near the end of the series During Master Asia's death, more exactly. In fact, Master Asia's last words refer to how beautiful sunrise is to him. .

Upon the appearance of dark stormclouds due to the appearance of Bakura's evil side, the Spanish Gag Dub of Yu-Gi-Oh! featured the line: "Poor weather conditions?!"

An interesting use of the idea is in Fullmetal Alchemist. At Hughes's funeral, Roy says the line, "It's raining." We are then shown a clear blue sky (indicating that he is, of course, crying).

It was my interpretation that he said it was raining because he felt useless (rain prevents his flame alchemy from working) because he was unable to do anything about Hughes's death.

Variant in Detonator Orgun, as the titular Detonator dies in the first few minutes of the show, it reaches out towards the sun... while in space.

Similarly, the first rain seen in the whole of Wolf's Rain falls during the final episode, finally justifying the title, just after Cheza has died and her body has dissolved into seeds, and Kiba is dying. The rain causes the seeds to germinate into lunar flowers, which somehow regenerate the world's ecology. Or something.

Cowboy Bebop both averts this. Of the three major character deaths in the series, Julia dies during a downpour, and Spike and Vicious die under a cloudless blue sky. The weather conditions of the latter death is even emphasized by the final ending theme, "Blue."

A variation of this occurs in AIR. The beautifully rendered sky with its bright sun and fluffy clouds already plays a big part in the series as a whole, but it really reaches its prime during Misuzu's final moments.

TrigunLegato is killed at sunset as part of his Xanatos Gambit: no matter what Vash did at that point, kill Legato or let his own friends die, he would suffer immense emotional anguish.

In the Chrono Crusade anime, Chrono and Rosette die as the sun sets. Just in case you don't get the symbolism, they show Rosette's watch ticking away her final moments as well.

Happens all the time in Castlevania. As you strike down Dracula, either the sun rises, or a window conveniently breaks to let in a beam of sunlight, thus vaporizing his remains.

In fact, the convenient dramatic timing of sunrise happens all the time in vampire media (primarily movies); it could be a trope all its own.

The "death at sunset" variant was the entire modus operandum of the assassin "Twilight" Suzuka—to the point that Gene merely had to delay her from killing Fred until the sun had already set for her to declare her attempt "a failure" and force her to wait another 24 hours.

One of the classic examples of the dying while looking at the sunset subtrope can be found in Pat Garrett And Billy The Kid. Sheriff Baker somewhat reluctantly accompanies Pat Garrett to raid a bandit's safehouse in an attempt to learn where Billy is holed up, and gets wounded multiple times in the ensuing gunfight. He walks away from the fight to sit beside a small stream and wordlessly look out at the sunset while Bob Dylan's Knocking on Heaven's Door (which was written specifically for that scene) plays in the background. The entire scene has been called an elegy for the Western.

Dracula the Undead lampshades this, where The clouds part and the sun comes out when Dracula is killed. Dracula can control weather, so of course his power over it would stop when he died.

A rather large subversion: In the first novel of the Forgotten Realms novel trilogy The Last Mythal, Forsaken House, the prologue begins with an elf hero, acting commander only by rank succession, walking out to challenge the fiend commanding the opposing forces, a fight that leads to his death. The book points out that unlike the ballads told of this story, the fight was not at sunset, and rains did not follow the hero's death: instead, it was a miserable, hot, muggy cloudless day in late summer, at two in the afternoon.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Voldemort dies as the sun rises.

Brandon Sanderson's Mistborn The Final EmpireThe Lord Ruler is defeated and killed as the sun rises.

Shows up in The Areas of My Expertise. In the Common Long and Short Cons section, Hodgman assumes a lot of things that are quite beyond the con artist's control, like the sun going behind a cloud at a dramatic moment.

Averted when Buffy's mother died. Not only was the weather sunny and clear, but one scene featured sounds of children playing outside just to drive home the fact that the death of a loved one does not result in a sudden warping and darkening of nearby reality.

Babylon 5, "Into the Fire": Londo is outside on Centauri Prime celebrating ridding the world of the Shadows' influence - and thereby saving it from the Vorlons' world-destroying rampage - when the obligatory giant shadow comes out of nowhere. Granted, it's a Vorlon planet-killer, not a cloud, but the effect is similar.

The Psych episode "Cloudy... With a Chance of Murder". The cloud in question becomes a plot point - "Clouds don't kill people; people kill people!"

Parodied in Peasant's Quest. When the player kills the Kerrek, the sun is obscured by clouds and it begins to rain, and the narrator comments "You're feeling pretty good, though, so the artless symbolism doesn't bug you."

In Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time, Farah dies in a level called "The Setting Sun."

In the unlikely shot that Japan is beaten back to their island by China in Hearts of Iron the event signifying the peace-treaty and subsequent communist revolt in Japan is called "The Setting Sun". This is partly this trope, but also partly to pun on Japans native name "the Land of the Rising Sun". There are several events dealing with sunrise too.

The sun shines through clouds throughout the entire "The Sacrifice" campaign. (Left 4 Dead and Left 4 Dead 2) You walk towards the sun at several points in the campaign (obscuring your view) and even the poster has the sun shining directly behind Bill.

In Okami, a looming solar eclipse (it happens at the speed of plot, but still) leads up to your confrontation with Yami. When you finally meet him, the sun goes completely dark and things get worse. By the way, you are playing as the Shinto sun goddess, Amaterasu.

A variation happens in The Legend of Zelda the Wind Waker; it's mostly sunny when the battle starts, but it soon darkens and starts raining heavily (literally as heavy as the entire ocean, to be precise). The battle ends with the death of Ganondorf (who doesn't get better this time around), the King of Hyrule, and Hyrule itself.